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  • 00:03

    February 13, 1875 - readers of the Chicago Times open their papers and are met with a

  • 00:11

    rather alarming headline:

  • 00:13

    "BURNED ALIVE!”

  • 00:14

    A seeming news bulletin of a horrific and gruesome fire (caused by an overturned gas

  • 00:20

    burner) that engulfed an unnamed Chicago theater - burning alive some 157 patrons as they fought

  • 00:28

    desperately to escape the flames. Victims, many trampled to death, were pulled from the

  • 00:33

    rubble as blackened corpses.

  • 00:36

    Listed in the paper were the initials of numerous casualties (a custom during that time.)

  • 00:41

    To the casual reader skimming through the paper, the story is quite real, but a careful

  • 00:46

    examination of the article’s closing lines reveal that the event was simply hypothetical.

  • 00:51

    A fictional account presented as reality, meant to enlighten the readership to the very

  • 00:57

    real fire hazards present in Chicago’s theater district. This piece of shock-mock journalism?

  • 01:03

    A public service, of sorts.

  • 01:06

    Chicago Times’ readers are, of course, equal parts disgusted and incensed. A flood of letters

  • 01:12

    pour in, telling the paper off for such ill-conceived sensationalism. The Time’s rival paper,

  • 01:17

    the Chicago Tribune, publishes a scathing article in response, reporting that one local

  • 01:23

    woman had died from the shock of seeing what she believed were her husband’s initials

  • 01:28

    in the article. Of course, THIS story is ALSO made up, in the Tribune’s half-hearted attempt

  • 01:32

    to showcase how such articles are in poor taste.

  • 01:37

    The city’s readers eventually walk away from the episode disgusted at each publication’s

  • 01:42

    self-imagined hoaxes. Respect is lost - but so, too, is the message The Chicago Time’s

  • 01:48

    had hoped the readership would walk away with - that Chicago Theaters are in desperate need

  • 01:53

    of safety improvements.

  • 01:58

    [music]

  • 02:03

    November 23, 1903.

  • 02:06

    The Ribbon Cutting for The Iroquois Theater.

  • 02:09

    Located at 24–28 West Randolph Street - a location chosen specifically to attract women

  • 02:15

    on day trips from out of town, who would be more comfortable attending a theater near

  • 02:19

    the police patrolled shopping district, as opposed to the more dangerous sections of

  • 02:23

    Chicago under the dark of night.

  • 02:25

    Thus far, the theater's grand opening has been delayed for a number of reasons - from

  • 02:29

    labor disputes to architectural roadblocks - still, the venue is illustrious - a capacity

  • 02:35

    of 1,602 attendees spread throughout three impeccably adorned audience levels. The theater's

  • 02:43

    single entrance - a broad and beautiful stairway that leads from the foyer to the balcony level,

  • 02:48

    allows patrons of all shapes and sizes to “see and be seen” regardless of the price

  • 02:53

    of their ticket.

  • 02:55

    An ornate, 60-foot high ceiling held up by white marbled walls is awe-inspiring, and

  • 03:01

    a glass skylight over the stage makes every performance look magical.

  • 03:06

    Advertisements and playbills for the Iroquois Theater, in an effort to win safety-conscious

  • 03:11

    customers, claim the building is impervious to fire.

  • 03:15

    A declaration that certainly ruffles the feathers of one Chicago Fire Department captain, who

  • 03:20

    made an unofficial tour of the theater days before, finding numerous safety deficiencies.

  • 03:26

    Exit signs are missing or obscured by thick drapes. There are no sprinklers. No Fire Alarms.

  • 03:32

    No Water Connections, and no backstage telephones.

  • 03:36

    An editor of Fireproof Magazine, who toured the building during construction, noted the

  • 03:40

    absence of an intake, and also expresses concerns about the abundance of wood trim used in the

  • 03:47

    theater’s aesthetic design.

  • 03:48

    By the time of the opening, the only firefighting tools on hand consist of six metal canisters

  • 03:54

    containing a dry chemical product called Kilfyre, meant to be forcibly hurled at the base of

  • 04:00

    any flames.

  • 04:01

    Business is business, though. And deadlines, even more so… and with the stage now ready,

  • 04:07

    Iroquois Theater opens its doors.

  • 04:10

    It will take only a single month for disaster to strike.

  • 04:19

    [music]

  • 04:22

    December 30, 1903.

  • 04:24

    Wednesday.

  • 04:26

    The theater is presenting a matinee performance of the popular Drury Lane musical Mr. Blue

  • 04:31

    Beard. The play, a burlesque of the traditional folk tale, features Dan McAvoy as Bluebeard

  • 04:37

    and Eddie Foy as Sister Anne.

  • 04:39

    The show has been playing at the theater since opening night, but the attendance has been

  • 04:43

    more - many staying home due to poor weather, but on this day, things are looking up. Every

  • 04:48

    seat in the house has been sold, and the theater owners, eager to make up for lost revenue,

  • 04:54

    sell hundreds of standing room tickets for areas in the back of the theater - causing

  • 04:59

    such a crowd that many sit in the theater aisles, blocking the exits.

  • 05:05

    Many of the estimated 2200 patrons attending the matinee are children.

  • 05:10

    Shortly after 3pm, as the show is well into the second act, and 16 performers are on stage,

  • 05:16

    delivering a rendition of the song “Pale Moon Light.” - An electrical short circuit

  • 05:19

    cause the main spotlight to shoot sparks into the air. One of the stage’s curtains begins

  • 05:25

    to burn, and wood trimming on the front of the stage catches fire.

  • 05:29

    A stagehand rushes backstage to fetch the emergency metal canisters, and by the time

  • 05:34

    he returns, some of the singers start to notice smoke.

  • 05:37

    Kilfyre is meant to be thrown at the base of flames, but the fire in the theater is

  • 05:42

    taking place high above the stage, thus, when the stagehand throws the canisters, the chemicals

  • 05:48

    spill uselessly to the ground.

  • 05:50

    Embers begin to fall toward the nervous singers below, and in moments, the audience realizes

  • 05:56

    the emergency.

  • 05:57

    The patrons panic, and show star Eddie Foy, set to go on stage - rushes out and attempts

  • 06:02

    to calm the crowd.

  • 06:04

    Chunks of the burning scenery fall around him as he tries in vain to maintain order

  • 06:09

    in the room.

  • 06:10

    There is no telephone backstage. A member of production is ordered to run from the burning

  • 06:16

    theater on foot and alert the nearest firehouse. The Chicago Fire Department will not arrive

  • 06:21

    in time.

  • 06:23

    The fire spreads in seconds, and the audience attempts, in vain, to flee. The design of

  • 06:29

    the theater, which includes large hung mirrors, disorients many in the crowd. Others arrive

  • 06:34

    at the exits only to find locked accordion gates, set up to prevent people from sneaking

  • 06:41

    to better seats after the start of the show.

  • 06:44

    The audience is locked in.

  • 06:46

    The broad and beautiful staircase proves to be a deathtrap - there is a REASON, after

  • 06:51

    all, that Chicago fire ordinances require multiple staircases and exits for the various

  • 06:56

    balconies and sections.

  • 06:58

    One single staircase means one single exit - and 2200 disoriented theatergoers, desperate

  • 07:06

    for air and fighting for their lives do not form an orderly line.

  • 07:11

    The theater goes black, and hundreds are trampled in the chaos.

  • 07:16

    In just 20 minutes, 575 people are killed. At least 30 more will die of injuries over

  • 07:24

    the following weeks.

  • 07:25

    The Iroquois Theater is destroyed, in what will be the worst single-building fire in

  • 07:31

    U.S. history - more than doubling the number of fatalities seen during the Great Chicago

  • 07:36

    Fire of 1871.

  • 07:38

    And the next day, theaters in New York City and around the country eliminate standing

  • 07:43

    room seating.

  • 07:46

    Building and fire codes will soon be reformed; theaters all over the world will close to

  • 07:52

    be retrofitted - exit signs from this point forward will need to be clearly marked, and

  • 07:57

    in many cases, installed.

  • 08:00

    Theaters in Chicago will close for six weeks. Investigations will take place.

  • 08:06

    In January of the next year, Will Davis, the theater's manager, is arrested, and charged

  • 08:11

    with criminal neglect.

  • 08:14

    After a short time, he will be acquitted.

  • 08:16

    Before too long, newspapers across the country report on the disaster. The victims names

  • 08:22

    are published, and this time is no hoax. This time, what happened in the paper happened

  • 08:29

    in Chicago.

  • 08:33

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    out today.

All

The example sentences of STAGEHAND in videos (2 in total of 2)

taking verb, gerund or present participle place noun, singular or mass high adjective above preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner stage noun, singular or mass , thus adverb , when wh-adverb the determiner stagehand noun, singular or mass throws verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner canisters noun, plural , the determiner chemicals noun, plural
a determiner stagehand noun, singular or mass gives verb, 3rd person singular present her possessive pronoun a determiner carton noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner drink noun, singular or mass called verb, past participle " cuppliance proper noun, singular " and coordinating conjunction abi proper noun, singular tries verb, 3rd person singular present to to turn verb, base form

Definition and meaning of STAGEHAND

What does "stagehand mean?"

/ˈstājˌhand/

adverb
Theater employee helping a theatrical production.
noun
person who moves scenery or props before or during performance of play.